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Olympic 100m champion Elaine Thompson-Herah. PHOTO FACEBOOK
Olympic 100m champion Elaine Thompson-Herah. PHOTO FACEBOOK

Elaine Thompson-Herah beats Dina Asher-Smith

BBC Sport
Olympic 100m champion Elaine Thompson-Herah proved she is still the one to beat with an emphatic Diamond League win over a clutch of rivals, including Britain's Dina Asher-Smith, in Eugene.
The Jamaican stormed through the final 50 metres to win in 10.79.
Asher-Smith got off to the sharpest start but was overhauled, coming fourth in a season-best time of 10.98 seconds.
Elsewhere, Keely Hodgkinson won the 800m while fellow Briton Matt Hudson-Smith set a new national 400m record.
Hodgkinson continued her impressive start to the season as she surged to 800m victory in a world-leading time of one minute 57.72 seconds.
American Athing Mu, who beat Hodgkinson to Olympic gold last summer, withdrew from the event earlier in the week, denying the crowd a comparison between the event's two standout stars.
Hodgkinson's compatriot Jemma Reekie finished down in eighth.
US-based Hudson-Smith made the most of a reprieve after an apparent false start to break Iwan Thomas' 25-year-old 400m British record.
Hudson-Smith's time of 44.35 seconds in third is an improvement of one hundredth of a second on Thomas' 1997 mark.

Thompson-Herah lays down marker

Asher-Smith's time was an improvement on her 11.11-second win in Birmingham last weekend
However, she and the rest were all left behind by the winner's ominous statement of intent for the season.
Thompson-Herah, who defended a 100m-200m Olympic sprint double in Tokyo last summer, has been hampered by Achilles tendon and shoulder injuries this season, but moved up through the gears superbly to carve through the field in the second half of the race.
American Sha'Carri Richardson, who missed Tokyo after testing positive for cannabis, was second in 10.92 seconds, just ahead of Jamaica's Shericka Jackson.
Her victory came at the track where she ran 10.54 - the second-fastest time in history - last year and the venue for the World Championships in July.
"It got me ready for my championship in Jamaica next month," said Thompson-Herah. "I'm happy to see where I'm at. The result is good."
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, who was the 100m silver medallist behind Thompson-Herah in Tokyo, won the 200m in 22.41.
Fraser-Pryce is already certain of a 100m spot at the World Championships - she qualifies automatically as the defending world champion from Doha in 2019.
She has indicated that she will wait until after the competitive Jamaican trials next month to decide whether to try to double up at the championships by running in the 200m too.
Laura Muir found Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon too strong in the 1500m. The Kenyan motored away to victory in an impressive three minutes 52.59 seconds with Muir fading to 11th.
Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen sauntered to victory in the mile in three minutes 49.76 seconds, while Trayvon Bromell beat home American compatriots Fred Kerley, Christian Coleman and Noah Lyles to win the 100m in 9.93 seconds.

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Namibian Sun 2024-11-23

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